Airbnb, Travelocity, and Hilton Teach the Bad, Better, and Best of Net Promoter Surveys

The Net Promoter Score (NPS) is a go-to customer satisfaction metric. It relies on a simple question, How likely is it you would you recommend <a product or service> to a friend or colleague? You respond on a 0 to 10 scale, and the net score is computed by subtracting the percentage of 0-6 responses, a.k.a. “detractors,” from the percentage of “promoters,” those who give a 9 or 10 rating.

NPS’s appeal is the simplicity and also the score’s widespread use, which allows for cross-industry and within-industry comparisons. The drawback, as many have noted, is opacity: NPS alone explains nothing. That’s why I’m big on survey questions that allow free-text response – there’s no substitute for asking Why did you give that score? – and on review analysis and social listening and the use of sentiment analysis techniques that link feelings to product aspects and issues. So let’s consider the opacity issue solvable and turn to proper and improper NPS use. We’ll do that via three examples…

Bad: Airbnb

Check out this Airbnb survey I received, in response to a customer-service interaction I had in the wake of a host’s reservation cancelation two days before my arrival date:

Actually, Jarrod W wasn’t able to “sort everything out” for me. As a result, I think that Airbnb’s resolution of issues caused by late host cancellations sucks. But I still like Airbnb overall, so here’s the dilemma: Jarrod W’s ineffectiveness won’t actually affect my likelihood to recommend, but I don’t want to imply that he was effective.

Airbnb chose the wrong measure.

Better to measure customer effort when you seek to understand service/transaction satisfaction.How hard was it to accomplish your goal, to get the support you needed?

We found that measuring customer effort is not enough. It is the customer::company effort ratio that really matters, company effort being defined as customers’ perception of how much effort a company puts in to deal with their issues. When customers feel they work harder than companies to deal with a CX issue, churn rates and bad word of mouth are extremely high.

Bottom line: Simplistic metrics, misapplied, won’t get you far.

Better: Travelocity

By contrast, Travelocity does it better although there’s still room for improvement. Here’s the classic NPS question, this time focused on the platform itself:

Note an extra cue given to the customer: color-coded choices add graphic appeal not present in Airbnb’s survey, without adding complexity. The flaw in this survey is, however, a missing bit of complexity. Fact is, I am unlikely to recommend Travelocity as a place to book travel because the question rarely comes up. The Airbnb survey had the same flaw. If I answered the question as asked, my response would be a 1 or 2 even though I was satisfied and would have answered 8 or 9 if asked “Are you satisfied with Travelocity travel booking?” Instead, do what Hilton does in my next example. Add a few words in order to focus the question on real-world situations.

Bottom line: Wording counts.

Best: Hilton

Hilton sacrifices simplicity for precision, in a survey I received recently. Check it out in the image below: Satisfaction questions and the Net Promoter “How likely would you be to recommend…” question, each type properly used. The survey finishes by asking “value that you received for the price paid.” I like that Hilton asks about perceived value per my article, Perceived Value Is Key To Customer Experience. And the use of a value ratio is in keeping with the effort-ratio guidance offered by Jean-François Damais, quoted earlier.

Here’s a shot of the Hilton survey:

One small curiosity: Hilton’s scale descends from 10 to 1 rather than, as in the classic Net Promoter survey, ascending from 0 to 10. I’m guessing that the survey designers prioritized offering a single type of scale for the three types of question over using the type of scale – the number of choices and the order – conventional for each survey type. Good choice. My only recommendation is to add some free-text response questions, to enable you to get at reasons and root causes that explain responses.

So in conclusion: Airbnb, don’t take my low score to mean I’m an Airbnb detractor. I’m not. Rework you’re survey approach and you’ll find that out. Travelocity, wording counts. If you don’t get it right, you risk getting distorted answers. And Hilton: Nice going. Give your customer experience/market research staff a bonus. I’d recommend them, if a business asked me who to hire to design a customer survey.

One thought on “Airbnb, Travelocity, and Hilton Teach the Bad, Better, and Best of Net Promoter Surveys”

I agree with everything you have said here and wish more businesses took the time to really develop their survey. It reminds me of the saying, “You don’t know what you don’t know.” The why or why not is just as important most of the time.
In my opinion, I am not sure I would use the NPS question in a post customer service email. I would rather see, “Did we resolve your issue to your satisfaction?”